Blanchard v. Maureau

Supreme Court of Louisiana
Blanchard v. Maureau, 3 La. Ann. 128 (La. 1848)
Rost

Blanchard v. Maureau

Opinion of the Court

The judgment of the court was pronounced by

Rost, J.

The defendants refuse to pay a portion of the price due by them fora plantation, on the ground that they have just reason to fear an eviction. The court below gave judgment against them for the price, with a stay of execution till the plaintiffs furnished security against the eviction apprehended, in the snm of $4,000. The plaintiffs have appealed.

The land was purchased by P. F. Oyon, at the probate sale of the succession of Anne Bourg, in 1816. It formed a part of the community which had existed between her and Mathurin Daunis, h'ei'husband. A few days after, Mathurin Daunis, as a tutor of his minor children, Theodore Bourg, as curator of some of them, Marcel Daunis, one of the heirs of age, and Jean Charles Guillot, the husband of another of the heirs, passed an act of sale to Oyon, in conformity with the adjudication. Oyon subsequently sold to Lee, from whom the defendants purchased, assuming to pay the sum now claimed as part of the price. No order for the judicial sale is found in the records of the parish, and the defendants allege its nullity by í-eástur-of 'that'infarmality, on/4;her.a.uthoi¿ty of Elliott v. Labarre, 2 La. 326. This is, a nnltity» of which the heirs alone could have availed themselves, and more than ten years elapsed, while- they were all living and present after they attained the age of majority, without any attempt on their part to do so. We have no doubt of the good faith of Oyon, and the title under which he held was a just title. Biit it is true, as alleged, that the acts of possession, necessary for -the inception of the prescription of ten years, are not shown. It results, however, from all the acts of transfer that there were buildings and improvements upon the land, and that it was sold as a plantation. In the sale from Oyon to Lee, the vendor stipulates that the delivery will not take place till the first of January'next', following; and there is a further stipulation that the plantation shall be used and enjoyed by Oyon, even after that time, if the buyer fails to pay the first in'stalment'of thé'pricé at ma'tufityv The presumption of actual possession i-esulting from these facts and stipulations is sufficiently strong to induce us to remand the case, for the purpose of ascertaining the inception of the possession of Oyon and the facts of possession generally.

It is ordered that so much of the judgment as adjudges the defendants to pay the sum claimed, and the property mortgaged to be sold under it, be affirmed ; and that so much of the judgment as stays execution be reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings; the defendants and appellees paying the costs of this appeal.

Reference

Status
Published